Public Domain
The Online Books Page
Frequently Asked Questions
How Can I Tell Whether a Book Can Go Online?
In order for a book to go online, either
* the copyright holder (usually the author) has to give permission, or
* the book needs to be in the public domain (i.e. copyright on the material has expired), or
* there must be a special legal exemption allowing whoever puts the book online to do so
without permission of the copyright holder. (This last case is quite rare; in the US, it may apply
to libraries and archives with respect to some out-of-print copyrighted books published between
1923 and 1935. In some other countries, it might apply to books known as "orphan works".)
Most free online books are from public-domain texts, but there are also many books online with the
permission of the copyright holder.
How do I get permission from the copyright holder?
There are three basic steps:
* Find out the name and contact information for whoever holds the copyright and can give
permissions.
o The copyright page on a book will usually tell you who the copyright holder is. If a
publisher holds the the copyright, you can find out their mailing address by looking in Books in
Print. If a person holds the copyright, and their address cannot be found through other means, most
authors and estates can be reached care of their publishers. Many well-known authors also have a
copyright contact address listed in the online Writers, Artists, and Their Copyright Holders
(WATCH) database, or in the Authors Registry. You can also consult some guides to locating
copyright holders in various countries:
+ Australia: Owners of copyright: How to Find (from the Australian Copyright
Council)
+ Canada: Canadian Copyrights Database (official site: has post-1991 registration
information)
+ United Kingdom: Locating UK copyright holders (from WATCH)
+ United States: Locating US copyright holders (from WATCH)
* Contact them to ask permission.
o If you're writing to ask permission, tell them who you are and what you plan to do with
the book. If you make it clear that you're planning a free, non-profit venture, and are willing to
cooperate with the author, it's quite possible the author will welcome the chance to see their work
made available to new generations of readers. Authors may be concerned about losing control or
royalties for their work, or about the integrity of their work. You may want to address these
concerns in your letter. (For instance, you can note that they will retain copyright over the work,
and that your copy will prominently assert their copyright and author's rights. You can offer to
have them check over the electronic copy if they want to make sure it's being published as they
intended. You can also note that online versions of books, especially if they provide a way to buy
print copies, or other books by the author, in some cases have increased sales and demand for an
author's works.)
* See what the copyright holder says in reply.
o The author may reply quickly, or may take a while to respond (especially if the letter
has to be routed via publishers). Some authors may not reply at all. Others will say no. While it
may be unfortunate that the book cannot be read online, the author or other copyright holder does
get to have the last word on whether and how they want the book published online, while the
copyright is still in force. You can always try pursuing permission for someone else's book, or
work on one that is in the public domain.
How do I find out whether the book is in the public domain?
The rules vary from country to country. In the US and many other countries, authors can put a work
in the public domain by formally declaring that they are doing so. But most books enter the public
domain either because they are not copyrightable (e.g. certain government documents), or because
their copyrights expire.
Below, I give my best understanding of when copyright expires in various countries, but keep in
mind that I am not a lawyer, and should not be relied on for legal advice.
In the United States, the following rules apply:
* Anything copyrighted prior to 1923 is in the public domain. (Practically speaking, this
includes anything published prior to 1923, since publication without copyright put the work
straight into the public domain. But note this possible exception in some western states for some
1909-1922 foreign works that were not published in the US before 1923.) Due to a 20-year copyright
extension enacted in the US in 1998, copyrights from 1923 or later that are still in force will
stay in effect through 2018 or longer.
* Certain works copyrighted in 1923 or later may already have entered the public domain. In
particular, works published in the US before 1989 without proper copyright notice, and works
published in the US before 1964 whose copyrights were not renewed, may have entered the public
domain. However, works from 1923 or later that were originally published in countries outside the
US may still be copyrighted regardless of whether they were printed with proper notice or renewed.
To research whether a book's copyright has been renewed, or needed to be renewed, see this article.
* Works never published prior to 2003 (and never registered for copyright prior to 1978) are
now in the public domain in the US if they are by authors who died more than 70 years before the
most recent New Year's day. (For 2011, this means authors who died before 1941.) Although this new
rule does not put any previously published material into the public domain, it may allow some
long-lost manuscripts and collections of letters to be published online as "new" online books.
Peter Hirtle at Cornell has a useful annotated chart covering the US copyright status of various
types of works in more detail.
Here's a summary of copyright durations in other countries, last I checked them:
* Short or nonexistent: A few countries have no copyright relations with the United States or
with international copyright conventions. Other countries provide no copyright protection at all,
or protection only for a short time period or for locally produced or registered works. One country
in this category was Afghanistan, last I checked. The Online Books Page will not list online books
that are only in the public domain in such countries, unless they were originally published in
those countries, or the copyright holder has given permission. (Note that in the US, works are not
eligible for copyright protection unless they are published or created in a country that has
copyright relations with the US.)
* Life + 25: The Universal Copyright Convention specifies that copyrights should run for the
life of the author plus (at least) 25 years (which is sufficient to protect a work during the
lifetime of the author and the minority of the author's children). Most UCC members, however, now
have longer terms, because they have signed on to the Berne Convention (see below), or have joined
organizations like the World Trade Organization that require eventually implementing Berne's longer
copyright terms. Here are some countries that may still have the shorter UCC terms:
o Djibouti copyright law specified copyrights of life+25 years for most works, as of 1996
(the latest year for which I can find a law). However, they joined the Berne Convention in 2002, so
they may have updated their laws since then, or do so soon.
o Iraq copyright law was extended from life+25 (or 50 years total, whichever is greater)
to life+50 in 2004 by the US administrator Paul Bremer after the occupation of Iraq. It is unclear,
however, whether these changes will remain in effect after Iraq fully regains self-rule.
o Libya's copyright law of 1968 specifies copyrights of life+25 years, also with a
minimum term of 50 years from publication. Libya joined the Berne Convention in 1976, and I do not
know whether the terms were extended after that.
o Seychelles copyright law specifies copyrights of life+25 years for most works, as of
1991 (the latest year for which I can find a law).
o Sudan's copyright law also has life+25 year terms in general. It is unclear whether
this country has copyright relations with the US, or with international copyright conventions.
* Life + 30: In Iran and Yemen, copyrights tend to last for the lifetime of the author plus 30
years. Iran does not have copyright relations with the US or with international conventions, at
last check, and Yemen's relations are unclear.
* Life + 50: The Berne Convention specifies that copyrights should run the life of the author
plus (at least) 50 years, rounded up to the end of the calendar year. "Life + 50 years", is
therefore the standard copyright length in many countries, including (to the best of my knowledge)
Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belarus, Belize, Bolivia, Benin,
Brunei, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, China, Cuba, the Dominican Republic,
Egypt, El Salvador, Fiji, Indonesia, Iraq (under US occupation rules), Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Kenya, (South) Korea, Kuwait, the Kyrgyz Republic, Lebanon, Malawi, Malaysia, Moldova, Mongolia,
Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, New Zealand, Niger, Oman, Pakistan, Panama, Papua New Guinea, the
Philippines, Qatar, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Saudi Arabia, Solomon Islands, South Africa,
Syria, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Togo, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, the United Arab
Emirates, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, and Zambia.
Some life+50 countries are also considering extending their terms to life+70 years as part of
agreements with the US or the European Union. Some may already have done so, though I do not yet
have definite confirmation of any of the countries below. Among these countries are:
o Bahrain (recent agip.com commentary linked below suggests they may have gone to life+70
in 2006, but I haven't yet found a copy of the law where I can verify this)
o Dominican Republic and El Salvador (stipulated in CAFTA; I don't know what the
timetable is for such changes, or whether those countries have enacted new legislation as a result)
o Morocco is rumored to be extending or considering extensions of their copyright terms
to life+70. I'll try to find out more information.
* Authors living in 1954 or later: This reportedly is the transitional term for copyrights in
Russia, which extended its copyrights from life+50 years to life+70 years, effective July 28, 2004.
I am told that copyrights that had already expired at that point were unaffected, but I don't yet
have English-language confirmation on this point. (Kevin Hawkins of Michigan pointed me to a
Russian site at copyright.ru, whose text I can't read. There's also an English notice of the change
at petosevic.com, but it doesn't talk about transitional provisions.) Russia has also in the past
granted extra time for authors who were active in World War II, or who were repressed and then
rehabilitated. I don't know if those extensions are included in the new law.
* Authors living in 1955 or later: This is the transitional term for copyrights in Australia,
which extended its copyrights from life+50 years to life+70 years, effective January 1, 2005.
Copyrights that had already expired at that point were unaffected.
* Life + 60: In India and Venezuela, copyrights tend to last for the lifetime of the author
plus 60 years.
* Life + 70: In the European Union, Albania, Andorra, Argentina, Armenia, Australia (for new
works), Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Croatia, Ecuador, Ghana, Iceland,
Israel, Liechtenstein, Macedonia, Madagascar, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Norway, Paraguay,
Peru, Russia (for new works), Serbia and Montenegro, Singapore, Switzerland, Turkey, and Ukraine,
copyrights tend to last for the lifetime of the author plus 70 years. (The European Union includes
Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland,
Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.) Life plus 70 years
is also the standard duration of copyright in the United States for works first published after
1977. But note:
o Many countries with a term of life+70 years or longer adopted it relatively recently.
Some may have a transitional period that means that some works by authors who died less than 70
years ago may still be in the public domain. If you want to use some of those works in one of those
countries, you'll need to research national laws to see whether a country made the extension
retroactive, of whether it just simply froze the public domain for a while. For example, most
European Union countries made the extensions retroactive, rolling the public domain 20 years by
bringing works back into copyright. But Australia, which went from life+50 to life+70 in 2005, did
not do this; instead it has effectively postponed entry into the public domain for authors who died
in 1955 or later. (The public domain will start moving forward again in Australia at the end of
2025.) This may also be the case for Russia (see "authors living in 1954" above). Israel had also
done this previously, though long enough ago that its transitional phase has effectively ended at
this writing.
* Life+75: Even as more countries move to life+70 terms, some countries are now extending the
copyright even further. These longer terms may in the future serve as an excuse for extensions in
other countries in the name of "harmonization". In Guatemala, Honduras, and Samoa, for instance.
copyrights tend to last for the lifetime of the author plus 75 years, with certain exceptions. I do
not know if these laws cover older works or are just applied to copyrights current at the time the
longer terms were adopted.
* Life+80: In Colombia, copyrights tend to last for the lifetime of the author plus 80 years,
with certain exceptions. Again, I don't know to what extent, if at all, this law retrospectively
applies to older books, or whether they just apply to books under copyright when the longer terms
were adopted.
* Even longer: A few countries are now at or near the century point. In Cote d'Ivoire,
copyrights tend to last for the lifetime of the author plus 99 years. And in July 2003, Mexico
extended its copyrights to the lifetime of the author plus 100 years! Again, I don't know to what
extent, if at all, these laws retrospectively apply to older books, or whether they just apply to
books under copyright when the longer terms were adopted.
In some countries outside the US, there is also a "law of the shorter term", which may expire
copyrights for books written and published in other countries at the same time as they expire in
their "home" country, if this is a shorter time period.
In the cases of multiple authors, authors that are organizations rather than people, works not
published until after the author's death, and works published outside the country, national laws
vary.
You can often find information on publication dates and author's death dates from the book itself,
or from library catalogs. Other resources for this information include the New General Catalog of
Old Books and Authors (in the UK), and the WATCH database. We also have some more information on
determining death dates.
For more information on copyrights in various countries, see Copyright Watch from the Electronic
Frontier Foundation. Wikipedia also has a set of links on copyright length in various countries.
See also the following sites for additional information:
* Andean Community (Decision 351, 1993; official site)
* Australia (Australian Copyright Council notes on transitional provisions for copyright
duration)
* Austria (has some recent legislation not yet linked in Copyright Watch; courtesy UNESCO)
* Bahrain (summary information in English on 2006 copyright law changes; courtesy agip.com)
* List links below this point may be out of date and may go away; see Copyright Watch for
current information
* Barbados (1998 copyright law, courtesy of OAS)
* Belarus (from the Belarus Legislation Databank)
* Belgium (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Belize (2000 copyright law, courtesy belizelaw.org)
* Benin (information courtesy UNESCO; seeking better link)
* Bolivia (information courtesy US Department of Commerce)
* Bosnia and Herzegovina (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Brazil (in Portuguese; courtesy of the Biblioteca Nacional in Brazil. See also English copy
of the law at WIPO
* Brunei (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Bulgaria (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Burkina Faso (information courtesy UNESCO; seeking better link)
* Burundi (information courtesy UNESCO; seeking better link)
* Cambodia (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Cameroon (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Canada (official Canadian IP Office)
* China (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Colombia (information courtesy WIPO)
* Costa Rica (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy of OAS)
* Cote d'Ivoire (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Croatia (courtesy jagor.srce.hr)
* Cuba (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Cyprus (summary by Andreas Neocleous Co.)
* Czech Republic (information courtesy WIPO)
* Denmark (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Djibouti (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Ecuador (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy of OAS)
* Egypt (information courtesy agip.com)
* Estonia (courtesy esis.ee)
* European Union (copyright harmonization legislation; official site)
* Fiji (information courtesy University of the South Pacific)
* Finland (information courtesy UNESCO)
* France (in French only)
* Germany (from WIPO via iuscomp.org; see also original German at transpatent.com)
* Greece (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Guatemala (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy of OAS)
* Honduras (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy UNESCO)
* Hungary (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Iceland (from the Iceland Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture)
* India (India copyright office)
* Indonesia (summary courtesy a2knetwork.org)
* Iraq: old law (courtesy agip.com) and occupation update (courtesy the Coalition Provision
Authority)
* Iran (information from parstimes.com)
* Ireland: Copyright and Related Rights Act 2000 (official Irish government site)
* Israel (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Italy (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Japan (info provided by the Copyright Research and Information Center)
* Jordan (information courtesy agip.org)
* Kazakhstan (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Kenya (information courtesy UNESCO)
* (South) Korea (at copyright.or.kr)
* Kuwait (information courtesy mideastlaw.com)
* Kyrgyz Republic (from the Kyrgyz State Agency of Science and Intellectual Property)
* Latvia (information courtesy latiss.lv)
* Lebanon (information courtesy agip.com)
* Libya (information courtesy agip.com)
* Liechtenstein (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Lithuania (summary at osi.hu)
* Luxembourg (copyright law; in French)
* Macedonia (official text and unofficial translation; courtesy Macedonian Legal Resource
Center)
* Madagascar (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Malawi (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Malaysia (information courtesy lawyerment.com.my)
* Malta (information courtesy Aldo Zammit Borda)
* Mexico (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy of OAS; extension to life+100 documented in this
note from Ladas and Parry)
* Moldova (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Mongolia (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Namibia (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Nepal (summary article courtesy UNESCO)
* Netherlands: Text of the Dutch Copyright Law (Auterswet 1912) (at ivir.nl)
* New Zealand: Copyright Act 1994 (with links to later amendment acts; see also a government
information sheet)
* Namibia (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Nicaragua (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy UNESCO)
* Nigeria (from nigeria-law.org)
* Norway (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Oman (2000 law from official government web site)
* Pakistan (information courtesy WIPO)
* Panama (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy of OAS)
* Papua New Guinea (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Paraguay (copyright law in Spanish, courtesy of OAS)
* Peru (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Philippines (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Poland: 1994 law courtesy WIPO; for summary of the extensions to life+70 passed in 2000, see
this page
* Portugal (courtesy gda.pt)
* Qatar (information courtesy agip.com)
* Romania (information courtesy WIPO)
* Russia (1995 law courtesy UNESCO; see 2004 updates summarized at petosevic.com)
* Samoa (information courtesy University of the South Pacific)
* Saudi Arabia (information courtesy agip.com)
* St. Vincent and the Grenadines (1989 copyright law, courtesy of OAS)
* Serbia and Montenegro (summary of 2004 law changes by Serbia and Montengro's head of
copyright and related rights department)
* Seychelles (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Singapore (Singapore Intellectual Property Office website)
* Slovakia (information courtesy WIPO)
* Slovenia (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Solomon Islands (information courtesy University of the South Pacific)
* South Africa (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Spain (information courtesy WIPO)
* Sudan (information courtesy agip.com)
* Sweden (information courtesy WIPO)
* Switzerland (courtesy Swiss Federal Institute of Intellectual Property)
* Syria (courtesy agip.com)
* Taiwan (official government website)
* Tanzania (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Thailand (information courtesy WIPO)
* Togo (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Trinidad and Tobago (1997 copyright law courtesy of OAS)
* Tunisia (information courtesy agip.com)
* Turkey (information courtesy WIPO)
* Ukraine (2001 law courtesy cipr.org)
* United Arab Emirates (information courtesy agip.com)
* United Kingdom (official Patent Office Site)
* United States (official Copyright Office site)
* Uruguay (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Uzbekistan (information courtesy gtz.de's LexInfoSys)
* Venezuela (information courtesy UNESCO)
* Vietnam (information courtesy WIPO)
* Yemen (courtesy agip.com)
* Zambia (information courtesy UNESCO)
(If anyone can provide additional documentation on their own country's laws, I'd be interested in
seeing it. Thanks to Peter Evans, Stephen Fishman, Kevin Hawkins, Wojciech Kotwica, Christian
Steiner, and others for helping me find this information!)
What if the book is copyrighted in some countries, but public domain in others?
Consider first whether it's copyrighted in your own country (or the country where your Web site is
located, if that's different). I will generally list books on the Online Books Page if they're
public domain in the countries they're being served from. However, if they are not yet public
domain in the US (where this page is located) I will include a warning mentioning this.
As far as I'm aware, there are not yet hard-and-fast rules on the distribution of legal
responsibility for downloading etexts from a country where they're public domain to a country where
they're not. But I would at the least include a warning if you know that some of the texts you
serve are copyrighted in some countries. And I would avoid downloading texts from other countries
that are copyrighted in your own country.
What's this special legal exemption for libraries and archives?
When the United States Congress extended copyrights 20 years in 1998, they included a provision
that "libraries and archives" could, during the last 20 years of a copyright's term, and for
purposes of preservation, scholarship, or research, "reproduce, distribute, display, or perform in
facsimile or digital form a copy or phonorecord of the work or portions of the work", if it has
determined that:
1. the work is not subject to normal commercial exploitation
2. a copy or phonorecord of the work cannot be obtained at a reasonable price
3. the copyright holder or its agent has not filed a notice with the Copyright Office claiming
either of the two conditions above.
As of 2011, this may allow certain copyrighted and out-of-print works from 1923-1935 to go online
from the web sites of libraries and nonprofit archives. For more information, including how to
search notices of claims, see this page from the US Copyright Office. Of course, some copyrights
from those years have already expired due to nonrenewal.
What about orphan works exemptions?
There aren't any yet in the US. As of 2011, there may be some limited orphan works exemptions in
some other countries. We'll post details here as we learn more.
What about reprints of public domain works? Can I work from those, or do they get a new copyright?
A simple reprint of a book, without any creative additions or changes, does not get a new copyright
of its own-- at least not in the United States. (Some other countries may have a limited
"facsimile" right-- check local laws for details.) However, some reprints have been re-edited, or
include new material, which may be eligible for a new copyright. If you'd like to transcribe or
scan a reprint edition, first check the copyright page to see if any new copyrights are claimed. In
some cases, reprints only copyright the foreword, or the notes, or new illustrations-- in which
case you can just omit those in your transcription. Even if a new edition is copyrightable, issuing
a new edition does not in any way lengthen or restore the copyright of older editions.
Note that some people prefer to transcribe from older editions, even if reprint editions are also
in the public domain. This may be because the older editions have a more accurate text, or because
they want to include the unique details of the older editions (such as the pagination, or the title
pages) in their transcription.
Where can I get more information on the public domain and copyright?
A very useful guide on the legalities of putting books online in the US is Mary Minow's Library
Digitization Projects and Copyright. It's written by a lawyer and librarian, and goes into more
detail on many of the issues discussed here.
If you would like more information on the public domain, a new (offline) book by Stephen Fishman,
called The Public Domain: How to Find Copyright-Free Writings, Music, Art and More (Nolo Press,
2000) is a useful guide to finding and using public domain works, and goes into much more detail
than is possible on a single Web page like this one. Here is the publisher's information page on
the current edition.
For questions on other aspects of copyright law that aren't answered on the Web, newsgroup
misc.int-property may be a good place to ask. The PIJIP-Copyright forum (formerly CNI-COPYRIGHT) is
a mailing list with a number of copyright experts on it. I have also found the following (offline)
books helpful for more complicated legal questions on copyright. Both books are updated every few
years:
* The Copyright Handbook: How to Protect and Use Written Works by Stephen Fishman, published by
Nolo Press, (See the publisher's information page on the 2003 edition.)
* The Copyright Book: A Practical Guide by William S. Strong, published by MIT Press. (See the
publisher's information page on the 1999 edition.)
Some additional details on public domain status have been collected on Wikipedia's public domain
guidelines page. That page can be edited by anyone, and therefore cannot be considered
authoritative, but it can be useful for an overview of some of the nooks and crannies of copyright
law that one might want to investigate further.
If you need expert legal advice, consult a lawyer who handles intellectual property matters.
(Again, I am not a lawyer, and this page should not be considered legal advice.)
Why do copyrights expire, anyway?
Because both copyright and the public domain serve authors and the public. Copyrights give an
author a temporary monopoly over distribution of her works, so as to encourage her to write and
earn a living by it. The public domain, in turn, is a rich source of material that people can
freely read, retell, perform, and distribute, and that authors can use to produce new creative
works.
For instance, the tale of Snow White, by being in the public domain, was told and retold in many
books, became widely loved throughout European and North American culture. It also has been made
available on the Net free of charge. But it also has formed the basis of new, copyrighted works,
like Walt Disney's movie "Snow White". Eventually, Disney's movie will in turn enter the public
domain, and the images, dialogues and songs of the movie will be freely usable in yet more creative
works-- or be freely used by schools and camps to help encourage kids to sing, draw, and eventually
create new works in their own right.
The US Constitution recognizes the balance between these interests by giving Congress the power "To
promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and
Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries".
Originally, in the US these 'limited times' were 14 years for copyrights, optionally renewable for
another 14. But the terms have been steadily lengthened over time, until now most copyrights extend
far beyond the lifetime of the artist they're meant to encourage to create. This upsets the balance
of copyright and the public domain in the promotion of the arts. It also means that works often end
up being lost to future generations, since most books drop out of print and then become forgotten
or inaccessible long before their copyright runs out. If they were in the public domain, anyone
would be free to ``revive'' them easily, especially in today's world of online texts.
Even so, entertainment industry lobbyists are now pushing new bills that would extend copyrights
even further. On October 27, 1998, the President signed into law an extension of copyrights on
older works to a maximum of 95 years, nearly a full century. Copyright terms for many newer books
can run even longer. During the hearing on this bill, Sonny Bono's widow expressed the wish, which
she said was also that of MPAA head Jack Valenti, of making copyright terms last effectively
forever!
I encourage US citizens to contact their legislators and the President to oppose further erosions
of the public domain. For more information, see these URLs:
* Opposing Copyright Extension Homepage
* Copyright's Commons
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Edited by John Mark Ockerbloom (onlinebooks@pobox.upenn.edu)
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